Classroom Management & Success As A Teacher: Who's Responsible?

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Classroom Management & Success as a Teacher

Managing a classroom requires many tasks; however, it's important to remember that classroom
management is not about achieving order for order's sake. It's about achieving order so productive
learning can occur. The ultimate goal of classroom management is to promote learning.
Who's Responsible?
ffective teachers provide opportunities for students to make decisions and follow through on those
decisions. !ood classrooms are not teacher"dependent environments but rather independent student
learning arenas. Teachers who provide students with multiple opportunities to make choices and accept
the consequences of those choices are e#cellent instructional leaders.
$tudents who come up to your desk and ask, %Is this what you wanted&' or %(hat do I do ne#t&' are
saying they aren't allowed to make their own decisions. Teachers who empower students in making
decisions are facilitating independent and responsible learners.
#pert )pinion
)n average, a typical classroom teacher will make more than *,+,, educational decisions every day. These
decisions can be minor -when to collect lunch money. or ma/or -what to do when a student has an epileptic sei0ure..
Establishing Routines
!ood classroom teachers teach their students classroom routines such as what to do when they finish an
assignment early, how to get e#tra help, how to move in to and out of the classroom, and how to take care
of their personal needs. This provides students with a sense of responsibility and allows them to make
decisions that should be theirs rather than the teacher's.
Decibel by Decibel
ffective teachers know that a quiet classroom is not necessary a productive classroom. 1earning is
sometimes noisy and sometimes messy -/ust look at any science activity involving a bunch of kids and a
tub full of earthworms.. They recogni0e that learning can take place in many different types of
environments. The activity level or noise level of a lesson may ebb and flow along with the level of
involvement or participation on the part of students. $tudents need opportunities to share, communicate,
and vocali0e their educational e#periences 2 all within previously established rules or e#pectations.
$uccessful classrooms tend to involve significant amounts of class discussion and group e#ploration. 3
quiet classroom may be a dead classroom.
Majority Rules
!ood teachers establish a set of e#pectations early in the school year. These e#pectations are clearly
detailed and e#plained to students and are upheld consistently throughout the entire school year.
ffective teachers provide opportunities for students to take responsibility for establishing rules and the
resultant consequences. They know that this ownership factor can be a positive motivator for all students.
Lifelong Learners
!ood teachers are those who keep learning, who continually add to their knowledge base throughout
their teaching career. My lifelong motto has always been, %!ood teachers have as much to learn as they
do to teach.' 4our education is a continual learning process. It doesn't stop /ust because you've graduated
and have a teaching certificate. It means that if you are to provide the best possible education for your
students, you need to provide yourself with a variety of learning opportunities, too.
It would be erroneous to think that your four or five years of college were all you needed to be successful
in the classroom. There are too many developments within the field of education to think your college
degree is the summation of all the skills, talents, and knowledge you'll need for the rest of your career.
(hat you learn throughout the remainder of your teaching career might be significantly more important
than the courses you've taken in college.
!ood teachers keep current, stay active, and continually seek out new answers or new questions for
e#ploration. 4our desire to find out more about effective teaching methods and dynamic new discoveries
within your field can add immeasurably to your talents as a teacher and can also add to your students'
appreciation of education in their own lives.
Why Teachers Fail
Teachers sometimes fail. Teacher failure, whether dismissal, reprimand, or reassignment, is most
frequently the result of poor human relations skills than lack of knowledge about their sub/ect matter. The
following reasons are most frequently mentioned5
Inability to organi0e and control a classroom of students
1ack of knowledge concerning how children grow and develop as pertaining to pupil"teacher interactions
Inability to work effectively with other educators
Inability to work effectively with parents
$ub/ect"matter inadequacies
)ther -immorality, insubordination, absenteeism, child abuse, senility, drugs, or alcohol.
The bottom line is this5 your knowledge about a sub/ect is considerably less important than your
knowledge about students -or other people in the school.. 6egardless whether you're an elementary
teacher or a secondary teacher, if you're more concerned about human relations than you are about your
sub/ect matter, you'll more than likely be a successful teacher

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